The Dictatorship
‘Reading Rainbow’ returns to a country far more hostile to books and diversity
Once upon a time in a land of rabbit-eared TV sets that displayed four or five stations tops, there existed a half-hour program celebrating the joy of picture books that was called “Reading Rainbow.” From 1983 to 2006, host Levar Burton made televised story time a show children clamored to see. Then budget concerns and the apparent belief that teaching the mechanics of reading was more important than cultivating a joy of reading led to the show’s cancellation.
And a sorrow fell over the land. Especially among those whose days of reading storybooks were long past. I would have loved to have introduced my daughter to “Reading Rainbow” the same way my wife and I introduced her to “Sesame Street.” But today’s return of the show, on YouTube with new host Mychal Threetscomes too late to be appreciated by a teenager who’s moved beyond, say, Maurice Sendak’s “Where the Wild Things Are” (“Reading Rainbow” Season 1, Episode 5) and whose current assigned reading features a wild thing named Grendel.
From 1983 to 2006, host LeVar Burton made televised story time a show children clamored to see.
I asked her this week if she’d heard of “Reading Rainbow,” and she said, “Hunh?”
“What about LeVar Burton?”
“Who?”
But almost everybody in my age group who responded to my social media post requesting “Reading Rainbow” memories brought up the theme song. “The opening song still feels like some sort of Pavlovian cue,” a Black woman wrote. “Whenever I hear ‘Butterfly in the sky’… I still want to run to the TV to see where LeVar and his friends who look like me will take me.” Willie Carvera gay white man from Appalachia, shared an interview he gave to Young Ravens Literary Review in which he was asked for “one of the earliest significant sounds” he could remember. He answered, “It’s the first few wispy notes preceding the theme song to ‘Reading Rainbow’ — that panflute-like oscillation that pattered up and down while cartoon graphics changed the reality on screen.”
“I grew up in a rural area with a fairly homogenous culture and almost no regular experience with people of color,” Carver told the journal, “so those notes — that song! — paired with LeVar Burton smiling at me and telling me about books with diverse characters taking place as far away as New York and California left me with a faith that I would find comfort and kindness anywhere I looked. It ended up being true.”
Mychal the Librarianas Threets is known on social media, developed a following online as an enthusiastic promoter of children’s literature and an advocate for their emotional well-being. He is a worthy successor to Burton and, not surprisingly, a big fan.
“I am a reader, I am a librarian because LeVar Burton and Reading Rainbow so powerfully made us believe we belong in books, we belong everywhere,” Threets posted to Threads on Thursday. “I am so happy for all of us that Reading Rainbow is returning! YOU all did this!”
The episodes hosted by Threets will premiere at 10 a.m. ET every Saturday during October on KidZuko, a kids’ YouTube channel from Sony Pictures Television. “Reading Rainbow’s” website will also show the episodes.
Though “Reading Rainbow’s” return is good news, Threets’ show can’t possibly have the impact that Burton’s did. Again, we didn’t have a lot of channels we could watch, so the television shows that existed reached a larger share of people. And Threets’ show won’t even be on television. It will be on the internet, where there’s even more competition for viewers and where the people who do watch shows have significantly shorter attention spans. It’s inconceivable, then, that the new show, however great it is, will be as influential as its predecessor.
I spoke by phone Thursday with Margaree King Mitchell, whose picture book “Uncle Jed’s Barbershop” was published by Simon & Schuster in 1993. The story of an itinerant barber in the rural Jim Crow South who spends a lifetime saving his money to open a barbershop of his own, “Uncle Jed’s Barbershop” won a Coretta Scott King Award in 1994. But the book skyrocketed in popularity in 1996, she said, when it was featured on “Reading Rainbow.” She said the show was “validation that ‘Uncle Jed’s Barbershop’ was a worthy book and deserved to be recognized” and that in the 32 years the book has been on shelves, the royalty check that followed the “Uncle Jed’s Barbershop” episode on “Reading Rainbow” was the biggest she ever got.
‘Uncle Jed’s Barbershop’ won a Coretta Scott King Award in 1994. But the book skyrocketed in popularity in 1996 when it was featured on ‘Reading Rainbow.’
When Burton was hosting the show, there did not appear to be many people arguing — at least not out loud — against the idea of introducing children to books by authors of different colors, cultures, ethnicities and experiences. But we have regressed as a country, and today’s “Reading Rainbow” reboot comes at a time when, unfortunately, censorship is ascendant and books are under attack.
Threets’ show will debut the day before the American Library Association’s Banned Books Week 2025 begins. Burton was the honorary chair of Banned Books Week in 2023and he told BLN host Ari Melber, “When I first read ‘Fahrenheit 451’ in high school, I thought, ‘Wow, what a dystopian, wild idea that this is,’ and here we are now living in that very reality.” He said, “Literacy is an incubator for empathy, and absent an exposure to a wide variety of literature, you grow up in an echo chamber, in a very narrow silo of information and experience.”
According to PEN America and the Florida Freedom to Read Project“Uncle Jed’s Barbershop” was banned, at least temporarily, in Duvall County, Floridain 2022. Mitchell said she was never contacted or given an explanation for why her book was considered problematic but concluded that “it was just because it featured Black characters” during a time when most Black people lived on farms and under segregation. The book, she said, is about “pursuing your dreams and not giving up until you achieve your dreams.”
Though I can’t imagine Threets’ show having the impact Burton’s did, in a country where the clouds of censorship continue to roll in and governments big and small are making reading lists whiter, I still think a new “Reading Rainbow” is exactly what we need.
Jarvis DeBerry is an opinion editor for BLN Daily. He was previously editor-in-chief at the Louisiana Illuminator and a columnist and deputy opinion editor at The Times-Picayune.
The Dictatorship
Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer is leaving Trump’s Cabinet
WASHINGTON (AP) — Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer is out of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet, the White House said Monday, after multiple allegations of abusing her position’s power, including having an affair with a subordinate and drinking alcohol on the job.
Chavez-DeRemer is the third Trump Cabinet member to leave her post after Trump fired his embattled Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem in March and ousted Attorney General Pam Bondi earlier this month.
In a statement posted on social media, Chavez-DeRemer praised Trump and wrote, “I am proud that we made significant progress in advancing President Trump’s mission to bridge the gap between business and labor and always put the American worker first.”
Unlike other recent Cabinet departures, Chavez-DeRemer’s exit was announced by a White House aide, not by the president on his social media account.
“Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer will be leaving the Administration to take a position in the private sector,” White House communications director Steven Cheung said on the social media site X. “She has done a phenomenal job in her role by protecting American workers, enacting fair labor practices, and helping Americans gain additional skills to improve their lives.”
He said Keith Sonderling, the current deputy labor secretary, would become acting labor secretary in her place. The news outlet NOTUS was the first to report Chavez-DeRemer’s resignation.
Labor chief, family members faced multiple allegations
Chavez-DeRemer’s departure follows reports that began surfacing in January that she was under a series of investigations.
A New York Times report last Wednesday revealed that the Labor Department’s inspector general was reviewing material showing Chavez-DeRemer and her top aides and family members routinely sent personal messages and requests to young staff members.
Chavez-DeRemer’s husband and father exchanged text messages with young female staff members, according to the newspaper. Some of the staffers were instructed by the secretary and her former deputy chief of staff to “pay attention” to her family, people familiar with the investigation told the Times.
Those messages were uncovered as part of a broader investigation of Chavez-DeRemer’s leadership that began after the New York Post reported in January that a complaint filed with the Labor Department’s inspector general accused Chavez-DeRemer of a relationship with the subordinate.
She also faced allegations that she drank alcohol on the job and that she tasked aides to plan official trips for primarily personal reasons.
Late Monday, on her personal X account, Chavez-DeRemer posted, “The allegations against me, my family, and my team have been peddled by high-ranked deep state actors who have been coordinating with the one-sided news media and continue to undermine President Trump’s mission.”
Both the White House and the Labor Department initially said the reports of wrongdoing were baseless. But the official denials got less full-throated as more allegations emerged — and when Chavez-DeRemer might be out of a job became something of an open question in Washington.
At least four Labor Department officials have already been forced from their jobs as the investigation progressed, including Chavez-DeRemer’s former chief of staff and deputy chief of staff, as well as a member of her security detail, with whom she was accused of having the affair, The New York Times reported.
“I think the secretary demonstrated a lot of wisdom in resigning,” Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said Monday after her departure was made public.
She enjoyed union support — rare for a Republican
Confirmed to Trump’s Cabinet on a 67-32 vote in March 2025, Chavez-DeRemer is a former House GOP lawmaker who had represented a swing district in Oregon. She enjoyed unusual support from unions as a Republican but lost reelection in November 2024.
In her single term in Congress, Chavez-DeRemer backed legislation that would make it easier to unionize on a federal level, as well as a separate bill aimed at protecting Social Security benefits for public-sector employees.
Some prominent labor unions, including the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, backed Chavez-DeRemer, who is a daughter of a Teamster, for Labor Secretary. Trump’s decision to pick her was viewed by some political observers as a way to appeal to voters who are members of or affiliated with labor organizations.
But other powerful labor leaders were skeptical when she was tapped for the job, unconvinced that Chavez-DeRemer would pursue a union-friendly agenda as a part of the incoming GOP administration. In her Senate confirmation hearing, some senators questioned whether she would be able to uphold that reputation in an administration that fired thousands of federal employees.
She was a key figure in Trump’s deregulatory push
Aside from reports of wrongdoing in recent months, Chavez-DeRemer had been one of Trump’s more lower-profile Cabinet picks, but took key steps to advance the administration’s deregulatory agenda during her tenure.
For instance, the Labor Department last year moved to rewrite or repeal more than 60 workplace regulations it saw as obsolete. The rollbacks included minimum wage requirements for home health care workers and people with disabilities, and rules governing exposure to harmful substances and safety procedures at mines. The effort drew condemnation from union leaders and workplace safety experts.
The proposed changes also included eliminating a requirement that employers provide adequate lighting for construction sites and seat belts for agriculture workers in most employer-provided transportation.
During Chavez-DeRemer’s tenure, the Trump administration canceled millions of dollars in international grants that a Labor Department division administered to combat child labor and slave labor around the worldending their work that had helped reduce the number of child laborers worldwide by 78 million over the last two decades.
In her statement Monday, Chavez-DeRemer said, “While my time serving in the Administration comes to a conclusion, it doesn’t mean I will stop fighting for American workers.”
The Labor Department has a broad mandate as it relates to the U.S. workforce, including reporting the U.S. unemployment rate, regulating workplace health and safety standards, investigating minimum wage, child labor and overtime pay disputes, and applying laws on union organizing and unlawful terminations.
___
Associated Press writers Steven Sloan and Will Weissert in Washington and Cathy Bussewitz in New York contributed to this report.
The Dictatorship
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The Dictatorship
GOP’s Mills faces expulsion effort launched by one of his Republican colleagues
Republican Rep. Cory Mills of Florida was already dealing with multiple, overlapping scandals when a judge issued a restraining order against the congressman last fall after one of his ex-girlfriends accused him of threatening and harassing her. Soon after, Mills found that even some of his allies were keeping him at arm’s length.
In December, Rep. Byron Donalds, a fellow Florida Republican, conceded“The allegations against Cory, to me, are very troubling. I’m concerned about him. I hope he gets his stuff worked out and cleaned up, but it has to go through ethics [the Ethics Committee]. And he has to, you know, basically do that hard work to clear his name, if it can be cleared.”
Donalds, a leading gubernatorial candidate in Florida, had previously suggested he saw Mills as a possible running mate, making the comments that much more potent.
It didn’t do Mills any favors when The Washington Post published a new report a few days ago highlighting body camera footage that showed police officers in Washington, D.C., who were prepared to arrest the GOP congressman after a woman accused him of assault last year, before a lieutenant ultimately ordered them not to when she changed her account. (Mills refused to comment, except to say that the woman’s initial claim was “patently false.”)
Two days after the Post’s report reached the public, one of Mills’ Republican colleagues announced an effort to kick the congressman out of office. NBC News reported:
Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., introduced a resolution Monday to expel Rep. Cory Mills, R-Fla., from Congress over accusations that include sexual misconduct.
Mills is being investigated by the House Ethics Committee in connection with allegations of ‘sexual misconduct and/or dating violence’ and campaign finance violations. He has denied any wrongdoing.
“The swamp has protected Cory Mills for far too long and we are done letting it slide,” Mace said in a statement. “We tried to censure him and strip him from his committee assignments. Both parties blocked it, but we are not backing down.”
By way of social media, the Floridian expressed confidence that he’d prevail if Mace’s resolution reached the floor, encouraging the South Carolinian to “call the vote forward.”
Time will tell whether the expulsion vote actually happens, but in the meantime, after NOTUS reported that Mills intends to respond with an expulsion resolution of his own targeting Mace, the congresswoman wrote online“Cory Mills lied about his military service, has been accused of beating women, has a restraining order against him, and has allegedly been stuffing his own pockets with federal contracts while sitting in Congress. As a survivor, I will always stand up and right the wrongs of others. He is only coming after me because he knows he’s next.”
It’s not often that Americans see members of Congress launch dueling efforts to kick each other out of office, but this is proving to be an unusually awful term.
Indeed, amid growing GOP anxieties about the upcoming midterm elections, there’s fresh evidence that the House Republican conference is both divided and unraveling.
Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an MS NOW political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”
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